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UID:UW-Physics-Event-2917
DTSTART:20130301T153000
DURATION:PT1H0M0S
LOCATION:2241 Chamberlin Hall (coffee at 4:30 pm)
SUMMARY:Life after Lorentz: Quantum Mechanics\, Gravity\, and the Crisis of Falsifiability\, Physics Department Colloquium\, Niayesh Afshordi\, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics & the University of Waterloo
DESCRIPTION:In the last decade of 19th century\, Hendrik Lorentz discovered a group of transformations of space and "local time" that left Maxwell equations of electromagnetism unchanged. In the ensuing decades\, this revelation led to the development of special and general theories of relativity by Einstein\, and has been the cornerstone of much of theoretical physics and astrophysics ever since. In spite of its tremendous success over the past century\, in this talk I entertain the possibility that Lorentz invariance might have been a "glorious historical accident"\, rather than a fundamental symmetry of nature! (My favorite) motivations for this line of argument come from a need for falsifiable theories of quantum gravity\, early universe\, dark energy\, and black hole physics.
URL:http://www.physics.wisc.edu/twap/view.php?id=2917
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